August 29, 2015No Comments

The True Island Experience

Line Icon Examples in Web Design

With highly popular flat and solid icons, line style glyphs rule the roost this year. They have found their place not only in traditional control centers, navigation bars, social media widgets or pagination but also in an inner structure such as service sections or feature lists.

From tiny intuitive vigilantly crafted variants to enormous and bold responsive versions, from one-tone realization to lavish solution, they are optimal and viable instruments for enriching design aesthetics, highlighting key points, supporting important text blocks, reinforcing navigation through the project and simply enhancing the user experience. Its delicate nature and a ton of personality can add subtle sprucing up to any integral part of the website.

Today, we have collected different examples where this type of refined line icons fits snugly to the composition, is in conformity with the general formatting style and benefits the project in its graceful way.

From tiny intuitive vigilantly crafted variants to enormous and bold responsive versions, from one-tone realization to lavish solution, they are optimal and viable instruments for enriching design aesthetics, highlighting key points, supporting important text blocks, reinforcing navigation through the project and simply enhancing the user experience. Its delicate nature and a ton of personality can add subtle sprucing up to any integral part of the website.

Web Design

Anchour leverages only four huge double-line icons that are used as visual cues for supporting the section of agency’s sphere of expertise. They go well with the entire theme and are well-suited to the elegant and sleek environment.

August 29, 2015No Comments

Some would argue it was far from ideal, Jamie O’Brien

Some would argue it was far from ideal, Jamie O'Brien

We've seen Teahupo'o bigger. We've seen it more perfect. But never has the world seen Tahiti's most feared wave so big and so perfect at the same time.

Some would argue it was far from ideal, Jamie O'Brien called many of the waves 20-foot closeouts. This coming from the man who surfed the place on fire, first thing that morning. But in terms of picturesque, cavernous walls turning themselves into exaggerated caricatures of what we think a wave is meant to look like, this was as good as it gets.

Move over 2011's Code Red, this is Code Orange, the slightly slimmer, slightly more attractive version of the average surfer's nightmares.

If a wave of consequence breaks in the world, you can guarantee Tim Bonython will be there to capture the vision, and Filmers@Large's most prolific contributor has gone above and beyond to deliver the goods once more.

Grab a lifejacket, some protective equipment and strap yourself in, this is the heaviest three minutes of footage you'll watch this year.

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